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Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu

Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu (Romanian pronunciation: [luˈkret͡sju pətrəʃˈkanu]; November 4, 1900 – April 17, 1954) was a Romanian communist politician and leading member of the Communist Party of Romania (PCR), also noted for his activities as a lawyer, sociologist and economist. For a while, he was a professor at the University of Bucharest. Pătrășcanu rose to a government position before the end of World War II and, after having disagreed with Stalinist tenets on several occasions, eventually came into conflict with the Romanian Communist government of Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej. He became a political prisoner and was ultimately executed. Fourteen years after Pătrășcanu's death, Romania's new communist leader, Nicolae Ceaușescu, endorsed his rehabilitation as part of a change in policy.

Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu
Minister of Justice of Romania
In office
23 August 1944 – 23 February 1948
Prime MinisterConstantin Sănătescu
Nicolae Rădescu
Petru Groza
Preceded byIon C. Marinescu
Succeeded byAvram Bunaciu
Personal details
Born(1900-11-04)4 November 1900
Bacău, Kingdom of Romania
Died17 April 1954(1954-04-17) (aged 53)
Jilava Prison, Ilfov County, Romanian People's Republic
Cause of deathExecution by shooting
Political partyRomanian Communist Party
Spouse(s)Elena Pătrășcanu, née Schwamern
Parent(s)Dimitrie D. Pătrășcanu
Lucreția Pătrășcanu
Alma materUniversity of Bucharest
Leipzig University
ProfessionLawyer

Early life

Pătrășcanu was born in Bacău to a leading political family, as the son of Poporanist figure Dimitrie D. Pătrășcanu (Lucrețiu's mother, Lucreția, was a scion of the Stoika family of Transylvanian petty nobility).[1] He became a Poporanist and later a socialist in his youth,[2] joining the Socialist Party of Romania in 1919,[3] and working as editor of its newspaper, Socialismul (1921).[4] Professionally, he was educated at the University of Bucharest's Faculty of Law, from which he graduated in 1922, and at Leipzig University, earning his PhD in 1925.[5]

He had an intense journalistic activity. Collaborator in numerous newspapers, where he published his articles under various pseudonyms: M Andreescu; Bercu; R. Boldur; Coca; V. Dragomir; Fischer; Ghiță; Grigorescu; Ion. C. Ion; N. Lascenco; Mihalcea; Miron; Victor Mălin; A. Moldoveanu; Andrei Moldoveanu; L. D. Pătrășcanu; Stătescu; Titu; Vrabie and with the initials A. M and L. D. P.[6]

Increasingly radical after the success of the October Revolution,[7] he was one of the original members of the PCR (known as PCdR at the time) in 1921.[8] Pătrășcanu, Elek Köblös, and Ana and Marcel Pauker were the representatives of the group to the 4th Comintern Congress in Moscow (November–December 1922).[9] Back in Romania, Pătrășcanu was arrested and imprisoned at Jilava in 1924 (the year when the party was outlawed); he went on hunger strike until being relocated to a prison hospital.[5]

At the Kharkiv Congress of 1928, where he was present under the name Mironov,[10] Pătrășcanu clashed with the Comintern overseer Bohumír Šmeral, as well as with many of his fellow party members, over the issue of Bessarabia and Moldovenism, which was to be passed into a resolution stating that Greater Romania was an imperialist entity. Pătrășcanu argued:

Moldovans are not a nation apart and—from a historical and geographical point of view—Moldovans are the same Romanians as the Romanians in Moldavia [on the right bank of the Prut River]. Thus, I believe that the introduction of such a false point renders the resolution itself false.[11]

1930s

 
Eugen Rozvan, Vasile Cașul, Ștefan Dan, Pătrășcanu, and Imre Aladar in 1931

With Imre Aladar, Eugen Rozvan, and two others, Pătrășcanu was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in May 1931 as a candidate for the Workers and Peasants' Bloc, an umbrella group masking the outlawed party.[12] Later in the same year, the 5th Party Congress (held in Soviet exile, at Gorikovo), chose him among the new Central Committee members while Alexander Stefanski rose to the position of general secretary.[13]

In 1932, he was involved in polemics at the Criterion group, where he and his collaborator Belu Zilber defended a Stalinist view of Vladimir Lenin in front of criticism from the right-wing Mircea Vulcănescu and Mihail Polihroniade,[14] as well as from the Austromarxist perspective of Henri H. Stahl.[15]

Pătrășcanu again served as the PCdR's representative to the Comintern in 1933, and 1934 (remaining in Moscow until 1935);[16] Stelian Tănase argues that during this time he developed doubts about Stalinism itself.[17] During the following years, Pătrășcanu continued to prioritize opposition to fascism, and remained active in the PCR. In 1936, he was heading the defense team of PCR members who were facing the much-publicized Craiova Trial, but was himself denounced as a communist and consequently handed the position to Ion Gheorghe Maurer.[18]

World War II imprisonment

Pătrășcanu was imprisoned during World War II and, after August 1940, spent time at the Târgu Jiu internment camp with Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej and the "prison faction" of the Party (the communists inside Romania, virtually all imprisoned at various stages of the war, as opposed to those who had taken refuge inside the Soviet Union).

Like his fellow activist Scarlat Callimachi, he was set free by the National Legionary Government while the fascist Iron Guard, which allied Romania with Nazi Germany, was trying to preserve good relations with the Soviet Union.[19] He subsequently followed orders from Teohari Georgescu to re-create a defunct outlet of the party, the cultural society Amicii URSS ("Friends of the USSR").[20]

In 1941, following the Legionary Rebellion, he was again arrested by the regime of Conducător Ion Antonescu. After a release from camp for health reasons in 1943, he was under house arrest in Poiana Țapului; allowed to settle in Bucharest later in that year, he remained under supervision until May 1944.[21]

1944 negotiations and fall of Foriș

According to Ioan Mocsony Stârcea, marshal of King Michael I's court between 1942 and 1944, he met Pătrășcanu in April 1944 in order to mediate an agreement between the monarch and the Communists regarding a pro-Allied move to overthrow Antonescu and withdraw Romania, which was fighting the Soviets on the Eastern Front, from the Axis.[22]

Pătrășcanu (together with Emil Bodnăraș) represented the Communist Party during the clandestine talks with the National Liberal and National Peasants' parties, aimed at overthrowing the Antonescu dictatorship. Corneliu Coposu, who later claimed had friendly contacts with Pătrășcanu at the time, also claimed that the latter had been selected by the Soviets as representative of the Communists (during negotiations in Cairo, Nikolai Novikov, the Soviet ambassador to Egypt, had reportedly first mentioned Pătrășcanu's name to Barbu Știrbey for further contacts).[23] It was also at this time that Gheorghiu-Dej and Bodnăraș, together with Constantin Pîrvulescu and Iosif Rangheț, toppled the general secretary Ștefan Foriș, and assumed leadership of the party[24] (Gheorghiu-Dej had probably attracted Pătrășcanu's support for the planned move as early as 1943).[20]

According to Mocsony Stârcea, Pătrășcanu was responsible for a compromise between the Communist Party and institutions of the Romanian monarchy (allegedly assuring the king that it was not his party's intent to proclaim a republic without a previous referendum on the matter).[22] Coposu also claimed that, through Pătrășcanu, the Communist Party had entered negotiations with the other opposition groups and informed them of abandoning its previous theses of the future Romanian state.[23]

August 23 and government position

The collaboration led to the arrest of Ion Antonescu and Mihai Antonescu at the Royal Palace in Bucharest, during the August 23 Coup (1944). Pătrășcanu (together with Belu Zilber)[25] authored the proclamation to the country which the king read on National Radio immediately after the coup,[26] and, confronting the new Premier Constantin Sănătescu, imposed himself as a PCR representative on the delegation that signed Romania's armistice with the Soviets, on September 12, 1944.[27] Present in Moscow, he contacted Ana Pauker and Vasile Luca through their overseer Andrey Vyshinsky, reestablishing communication between the two major sections of the PCR.[27] Pătrășcanu joined the Central Committee in 1945—after having returned to Romania with the Red Army late in 1944—and was largely responsible for the success his party had in controlling Romania's legal framework for the following years.[28]

During Soviet occupation, he served on the Romanian Politburo from 1946 to 1947 and held power in the new governments, as Minister without Portfolio (1944) and Minister of Justice (1944–1948).[29] Pătrășcanu, who attempted to become general secretary early in 1944 (before Gheorghiu-Dej secured the position for himself),[citation needed] was considered[who?] leader of the party's "Secretariat Communists" (perceived[who?] as less willing to follow Stalin's directions).

After the ascension of the Petru Groza government, Pătrășcanu was also one of the initiators of purges and persecutions, being responsible for dismissing and arresting members of the civil service who were considered suspect, for the creation of the Romanian People's Tribunals, as well as the appointment of prosecutors (promoting Avram Bunaciu, Constanța Crăciun, and Alexandra Sidorovici).[30]

Citing a statement by Pătrășcanu rendered by The New York Times, British Trotskyist commentator Tony Cliff extended his critique of the people's democracies of the Eastern Bloc to the realm of justice systems and retribution for war crimes.[31] According to the American newspaper, Pătrășcanu had reassured media that "industrialists, businessmen and bankers will escape punishment as war criminals";[32] Cliff also argued that the new course in justice had failed to alter what he saw as Romania's "bureaucratic and militarist character".[31]

Pătrășcanu put pressure on King Michael to sign legislation that went against the letter of the 1923 Constitution, which contributed to the latter's decision to initiate the "royal strike" (a refusal to countersign documents issued by the Groza executive).[33]

Early conflicts with the Party

During the late 1940s, he is thought to have begun expressing his opposition to strict Stalinist guidelines; at the same time, Pătrășcanu had become suspect to the rest of the party leadership for his intellectual approach to socialism.[34] Gheorghe Apostol, a collaborator of Gheorghiu-Dej's, later expressed a particular view on the matter of Pătrășcanu's relations with the rest of the party:

He was a reliable party intellectual. But he was also a very arrogant man, self-important, intolerant, and unwilling to communicate with his party comrades. And yet, Gheorghiu-Dej treasured him. Between '46-'48, Pătrășcanu changed quite a lot."[35]

Around February 1945, he began to fear the possibility that Emil Bodnăraș was planning his assassination and that he intended to blame it on political opponents of the Communist Party (as a means to direct sympathy towards the latter group).[20] He suspected that Bodnăraș had chosen to back Gheorghiu-Dej (allegedly fearing that Pătrășcanu was betraying the fragile alliance established before the fall of Ștefan Foriș).[20] Consequently, he attempted to block Bodnăraș's rise to power, and denounced his reputedly corrupt activities as Secretary in the Interior Ministry to the other members of the leadership.[20]

Historiography is divided over the possibility of Pătrășcanu having initially allied himself with the PCR's second in command, Ana Pauker, in her post-war confrontation with Gheorghiu-Dej.[36] It is apparent that Pătrășcanu was alarmed by Pauker's close cooperation with Soviet overseers, and especially by her tight connection with Dmitry Manuilsky;[37] it was also contended that Pauker was intrigued by Pătrășcanu's self-promotion in front of Soviet overseers during late 1944.[20] Under arrest, however, Pătrășcanu asserted that he was closest to Pauker and Teohari Georgescu among the Romanian party leaders.[38]

 
Pătrășcanu, Teohari Georgescu, and Gheorghe Gheorghiu-Dej watching a May Day parade in Bucharest, 1946

Although, overall, Pătrășcanu was argued to have been much less revolutionary-minded than various other PCR ideologues,[39] his original perspective on Marxism remained strongly connected with party doctrine in its most essential points[40] (including his intense advocacy of collectivization, using statistics to point out the existence of a class of chiaburi, the Romanian equivalent of the Soviet kulaks).[41] He showed himself surprised when informed that the Soviet Union had planned a rapid communization of the country, and dismissed Vasile Luca and Pauker's vocal support for the latter policy.[20] Instead, he argued in favor of "making a distinction inside the bourgeoisie",[42] and opening the Communist Party to collaboration with the National Liberal Party.[20] Based on this, he denounced Pauker's agreement with Gheorghe Tătărescu's National Liberal dissidence (the National Liberal Party-Tătărescu, which he called "a gang of con artists, blackmailers, and well-known bribers").[42]

A serious break with the party line occurred in early 1946, when Pătrășcanu decided to take initiative and intervened in the standoff between King Michael I and the Petru Groza executive (an episode colloquially known as greva regală, "the royal strike"); with the help of Lena Constante, he approached the anti-communist figures Victor Rădulescu-Pogoneanu and Grigore Niculescu-Buzești, calling on them to convince the monarch to resume communications with his government.[20]

1946 elections

During the campaign preceding the rigged elections of 1946, he was actively involved in the PCR's electoral campaign in Transylvania, and, after drought and famine surfaced in several other areas of Romania, he attempted to persuade the peasants of Arad County to sell their wheat harvest to the government, to be used as aid.[43] Received with suspicion, he later reported that he had eventually been able to carry out the task.[43]

Responding to Hungarian-Romanian clashes, Pătrășcanu gave a speech in the city of Cluj, one in which he attempted to identify communism and patriotism.[44] It stated:

In the name of the government and of the PCR, I raise my voice against border changes [in connection with the disputed status of newly-recovered Northern Transylvania]. Democratic Romania ensures equal rights to coinhabiting nationalities, but the Magyar population needs to understand that its belonging to the Romanian state is definitive. Nobody has the right to debate our borders.[45]

He ran for the position of deputy in Arad County, and won through various electoral frauds (in Arad's case, forty inspectors nominated by the government had sole control over counting and recording the results).[46]

Pătrășcanu soon received harsh criticism from Gheorghiu-Dej, who branded the views expressed as "chauvinism" and "revisionism".[47] In parallel, the National Peasants' Party, as the main force opposing the PCR, published praises of Pătrășcanu in its paper Dreptatea, until Pătrășcanu met with the editor, Nicolae Carandino, and explained that such articles were harming his image inside the Communist Party.[48] Nevertheless, Pătrășcanu's writings of the time show that, in contrast with his 1928 point of view, he had largely accommodated Leninist principles regarding the national issue and Bessarabian topics,[49] although he used more neutral terms than the ones present in official propaganda,[50] and was known to have deplored the unwillingness of the PCR to reduce and refine its internationalist policies.[51]

Marginalisation

In 1946-1947, Pătrășcanu was nevertheless a member of the Tătărescu-headed Romanian delegation to the Paris Peace Conference, and, in fact, one of the signatories of the Peace Treaty with Romania. According to Belu Zilber, during this time, he read Arthur Koestler's Darkness at Noon[52] (a glimpse into forced confessions alluding to the 1936-1937 Moscow Trials, the book was banned throughout the Eastern Bloc). The attitudes he expressed in Paris were considered nationalist by his Soviet overseers,[53] and he himself complained to Gheorghiu-Dej about the party's suspicion surrounding his diplomatic activities.[54]

He was progressively marginalized inside the Party: his texts became subject to censorship and, on public occasions, his name was mentioned after those of less significant politicians.[55] The Communist press virtually ceased referring to Pătrășcanu as "comrade", and used instead the more distant formula "Professor Pătrășcanu", at the same time as Gheorghiu-Dej's speeches on combating internal currents of the Party.[56] The VIth Party Congress in February 1948 did not confirm his Central Committee membership, and in the months following the event, he was removed from government office.[57]

Belu Zilber claimed that having himself been subject to suspicion and marginalisation, he had attempted to warn Pătrășcanu of the change in climate, and had asked him to consider fleeing the Eastern Bloc, only to be stiffly rebuffed.[58] Zilber was eventually arrested in February 1948, on suspicion that he had been a Siguranța Statului agent infiltrating the party.[58]

Securitate imprisonment and interrogations

On April 28, 1948, Pătrășcanu was arrested and came under the investigation of a party committee, comprising the high-ranking Communists Teohari Georgescu, Alexandru Drăghici, and Iosif Rangheț; interrogations were occasionally attended by Gheorghiu-Dej.[59] His file indicates that the secret police (which was soon to become the Securitate) had been keeping him under surveillance from as early as the summer of 1946.[60]

In the fall of 1949, Gheorghiu-Dej (apparently contradicting the committee's conclusions) ordered Pătrășcanu's transfer into the custody of the Secret Service of the Council of Ministers (SSI) under the provisional charge that Pătrășcanu had not reported various political crimes.[61] A report on "Titoism" and collaboration with the maverick Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was presented to the Cominform: it placed Pătrășcanu, the Hungarian Republic's László Rajk, and Bulgaria's Traicho Kostov in the same camp, as "imperialist agents" (see Tito–Stalin split, Informbiro).[62] The investigation also implicated Remus Koffler, who had been imprisoned in 1944, during the confrontation between Gheorghiu-Dej and Ștefan Foriș.[63]

The day after the SSI began its inquiry, Pătrășcanu attempted suicide by slitting his veins with a smuggled razor blade; upon his recovery, he tried to take his life a second time by swallowing an overdose of sleeping pills.[64]

Immediately after his second suicide attempt, the Pătrășcanu inquiry was transferred to the Interior Ministry, where it was suspended for a six-month period to enable officers to determine a factual basis in the case.[65] When the inquiry resumed in February 1951, Interior Minister Teohari Georgescu ordered that the detainees in the case were not to be physically coerced, in stark contrast to the expressed instructions of the ministry's chief Soviet adviser, Aleksandr Sakharovsky, to do everything necessary to determine the guilt of the accused. In the summer of 1951 Teohari Georgescu, together with his deputies Gheorghe Pintilie and Mișu Dulgheru, reached the conclusion that there was no basis to continue Pătrășcanu's prosecution—and did so while the Soviet advisers were away on their summer vacation. When the advisers returned, they angrily vetoed any closing of the Pătrășcanu inquiry.[66]

It was in 1951 that Pătrășcanu responded to the charges voiced by Gheorghiu-Dej after the Cluj incident, indicating that he had attempted to "answer to the Hungarian revisionist campaign", as well as to aid his party in competing with the appeal of the National Peasants' Party among Romanians in Transylvania (to "take the weapon that was Transylvania away from Maniu supporters' hands").[67] He also criticized his own advocacy of a PCR alliance with the National Liberal Party.[20]

He was accused of having been financed by "bourgeois" figures during the electoral campaign, and even of having been bought by agents of the United States[68] or of planning, together with Ioan Mocsony Stârcea and Titoist agents, an "imperialist" insurrection in Săvârșin.[69] The latter allegation also surfaced in the parallel investigations of Koffler and Emil Calmanovici.[70]

Serious questions remain on the positions of the various Romanian Communist leaders on the Pătrășcanu case. The matter has not been satisfactorily resolved in the Romanian archives, for the simple reason that all records and transcripts of Politburo and Secretariat discussions on Pătrășcanu were summarily destroyed on Gheorghiu-Dej's orders.[71] In any case, no piece of evidence or confession was obtained by the inquiry until after May 1952, after the purge of Ana Pauker and Teohari Georgescu, who were accused by the Soviet adviser Sakharovskii of having "sabotaged and postponed investigations" in the Pătrășcanu case.[72] The Central Committee plenum that purged them assigned the Pătrășcanu investigation to a team of Securitate officials and their Soviet advisors, directly supervised by Alexandru Drăghici, Alexandru Nicolschi, and Vladimir Mazuru.[73] Under this new team, torture and beating began to be employed in interrogations in the Pătrășcanu case for the first time in the fall of 1952.[74] In time, authorities also alleged that, before 1944, Pătrășcanu, like Zilber, had acted as an agent of Siguranța Statului.[75]

Trial and execution

Pătrășcanu was kept in detention until 1954, when he was executed on 17 April[76] with Koffler in Jilava, near Bucharest, after a show trial overseen by Iosif Chișinevschi.[77] It is possible that he was tortured throughout the questioning conducted on direct orders from the Securitate's Alexandru Drăghici, and there have been rumours that he had one leg amputated before his trial.[78] Researcher Lavinia Betea notes however that, when his and Koffler's body where exhumed in 1968, both their skeletons were complete. Moreover, she concludes that, unlike the case of other defendants, physical violence was never used against Pătrășcanu or his wife.[79] The execution took place in the courtyard of Jilava Prison; Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed in his book, Cartea neagră a Securității, that Pătrășcanu was shot in the back of the head by a Securitate colonel.[80]

In preparation for the procedures, the Securitate took direct inspiration from the Slánský trials in Communist Czechoslovakia (where a team of Romanian officers had been sent to take notes) and, possibly, from the Soviet Trial of the Twenty One (which was allegedly used as template for Calmanovici's fabricated confession).[70]

Pătrășcanu refused to be represented by a lawyer, and even to organize his own defense. Aside from some outbursts against the prosecutors, he stated:

I have nothing to say, except [that I] spit on the charges brought against me.[81]

The actions taken against Pătrășcanu and others signaled the start of a wave of arrests and prison sentences, including that of his wife, as well as those of Harry Brauner, Lena Constante, Petre Pandrea (who was Pătrășcanu's brother-in-law), Herant Torosian, Mocsony Stârcea, Calmanovici, Victoria Sârbu (who had been Ștefan Foriș's lover), and Alexandru Ștefănescu.[82] In preparation for the trial, the Securitate organized interrogations of political detainees or suspects (Gheorghe Tătărescu, who testified against Pătrășcanu and was the target of a sharp rebuke from the latter).[83]

Belu Zilber, the first of the group to give in to Securitate pressures and confess to the charges, was verbally attacked by Pătrășcanu inside the courthouse — Pătrășcanu notably accused him of having invented the entire conspiracy account.[84] Records of their various interrogations show that both he and Calmanovici identified Emil Bodnăraș as the main instigator of their downfall.[70] Reportedly, Zilber had the following opinion of Pătrășcanu: "He was anti-Stalinist and anti-Russian, but for the sake of power he would sign on any Stalinist ineptitude and wickedness. I think his only purpose in life, more than socialism, was to enter history."[85]

Rehabilitation

He was posthumously rehabilitated in April 1968 by Nicolae Ceaușescu, in the latter's attempt to discredit his predecessors and establish his own legitimacy.[86] The main target of this campaign, as indicated by a Central Committee resolution, was Drăghici:

[...] the party leadership has uncovered the anti-party line which Alexandru Drăghici, encouraged by servile, uncultured, and decaying elements, has introduced to the [Securitate] bodies' activities, attempting to remove them from party control and to erect them into supreme bodies standing above party and state leadership, thus causing serious harm to activity in various domains, including that of scientific research.[87]

A party committee which included Ion Popescu-Puțuri[60] investigated the matter of his arrest and interrogation, concluding that evidence against Pătrășcanu was fabricated, that he had been systematically beaten and otherwise ill-treated, and that a confession had been prepared for him to sign.[88] This was coupled with various irregularities in procedures (such as the court having been given only 24 hours to assess evidence from years of investigation, and the death penalty having been decided by the party leadership before being imposed on the panel of judges).[89] Evidence was also presented that some of the false confessions were designed as political weapons in internal party struggles (implicating names of politicians who were not facing trial at the time).[90]

At the Party Plenum in late April 1968, Ceaușescu used Pătrășcanu's case and other ones to single out the negative influence of Drăghici and Iosif Chișinevschi, while also placing suspicion on Emil Bodnăraș and Gheorghe Apostol, who had approved of Pătrășcanu's purge.[91] All of them were required to express "self-criticism",[91] while Gheorghiu-Dej was condemned for having "initiated and overseen" the measures.[92]

Ceaușescu profited on the enduring perception of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu's activities as patriotic and verging on dissidence, while shadowing his fundamental role in the creation of the new penal system in Romania. In fact, although he was frequently quoted and displayed by the regime, Pătrășcanu's life was usually described in brief and vague sentences.[93] In popular discourse, Pătrășcanu was also largely identified with positive causes, and remained among the most popular Communist figures after the Romanian Revolution of 1989 toppled the regime.[94] Streets in Sector 3 of Bucharest and in Bacău were named after him.

Sociology

Overview

In his most important volumes (most of which attracted public attention only after 1944),[95] Pătrășcanu combined his commitment to Marxism-Leninism with his sociological training, producing an original outlook on social evolution (focusing on major trends in Romanian society from the time of the Danubian Principalities to his day).[95]

Aside from its support for communist tenets, his work shared many characteristics with the prominent currents of the Romanian sociological school (notably, the attention paid to prevailing social contrasts in a peasant-dominated environment),[96] and made occasional use of material provided by Dimitrie Gusti's comprehensive surveys.[95]

On feudalism and serfdom

According to Pătrășcanu, Moldavia and Wallachia had forsaken feudalism by the mid 18th century, maintaining instead a form of serfdom which had not been affected by the reforms of Hospodar Constantine Mavrocordatos.[95] He argued that, whereas feudalism was supported by metayage, legislation passed by Mavrocordatos had endorsed and prolonged corvées, a system consecrated in the 1830s by the new Organic Statute.[95] In his view, capitalism had manifested itself mainly as a reactionary force inside Romanian economy during the time of Phanariote rules. Thus, despite characteristic underdevelopment (which he also noted), the local economy had not contrasted with the stages postulated by Marxian economics.[95]

Pătrășcanu contended that the first relevant social conflict had occurred in 1821, at the time of Tudor Vladimirescu's Wallachian uprising. He rejected the notion that, despite Vladimirescu's statements to the contrary, the rebellion had a peasant character, and argued instead that it was evidence of low-ranking boyars and merchants ("the embryo of a class, that was to become the bourgeoisie")[97] attempting to emancipate themselves from Ottoman pressures.[95] In his view, its nationalist character (see Rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire) had been manipulated by high-ranking boyars as a measure to dissuade adverse reactions to privileges.[95]

On radicalism and reformism

The Wallachian Revolution of 1848, the most successful of similar revolts at the time, was, according to Pătrășcanu, a mature reaction of bourgeois circles against boyar supremacy[95] ("it only sought [...] to replace a [privileged] minority with another"),[97] but was generally not opposed to preserving an estate-based economy.[95] He similarly rejected Junimea's traditional criticism of post-1848 realities, indicating that, in its theory of "forms without substance", the group had failed to note that, as a means to preserve several conservative tenets, Westernization in Romania had willingly, and not accidentally, adopted an incomplete form.[98]

In analyzing the history of liberalism and radicalism in Romania, he concluded that many of the most extreme social reformists had rallied in opposition to land reform (he saw this phenomenon as having made possible the toppling of Romania's Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza, whom he saw as a supporter of industrialization).[95] He extended this criticism to socialist groups other than his own, arguing that the prevalent reformism was "the cult of legalism".[99]

These views placed Pătrășcanu in opposition to other left-wing authors in Romania — namely, the influential Poporanists, most of whom had emphasized various contradictions between the Marxian model and local realities, using Junimea's theory as a fundament (aside from Pătrășcanu's own father, these included his contemporary Virgil Madgearu and, to a certain degree, the Marxist Constantin Dobrogeanu-Gherea).[95] In parallel, Pătrășcanu's theories were in sharp contrast with those held by advocates of economic liberalism, and especially with Ștefan Zeletin's.[100]

On the 20th century

As part of his reflection on post-1900 realities, Pătrășcanu contended that, relatively delayed in comparison to economies of the Western world, Romania had become subject to "primitive accumulation of capital", where the role of colonialism was taken by exploitation of the peasantry.[95] Like Madgearu, he appealed to the works of Rudolf Hilferding, but used them as a basis to argue that foreign capital was being accumulated inside Romania, and only transferred further through a limited number of industries.[95] The Marxist historian Henri H. Stahl has challenged this particular thesis, calling it "highly questionable".[95]

While endorsing some aspects of Dobrogeanu-Gherea's theories regarding the ways in which serfdom was allegedly prolonged, in a discreet form, even after the 20th century, Pătrășcanu challenged his refusal to investigate the effects of capitalism in rural areas.[95] According to Pătrășcanu, the establishment of estate leaseholders, which he viewed as the cause for the 1907 revolt and other, more minor, peasant rebellions, was not a sign of prolonged feudalism, but one of capitalist penetration into agriculture.[101] Contradicting the Social Democratic ideologists Lothar Rădăceanu and Șerban Voinea (whom he accused of having lost contact with the working class), Pătrășcanu theorized that the Romanian petite bourgeoisie was shrinking under pressure from successful capitalists, while rejecting the notion that civil servants belonged to the middle class.[102]

Arguing in favor of a Romanian communist society during the late 1940s, Pătrășcanu indicated a series of essential steps to this goal: after discarding all legislation passed by the Ion Antonescu regime and purging the administrative apparatus, a political amnesty was to be declared, all properties upwards of 50 hectares were to be confiscated, the National Bank passed into state property while trade unions came under government supervision and a new labour code was enforced, and civil liberties were enhanced.[103] Ultimately, a new people's democratic government was to be imposed, removing all forms of antisemitism and chauvinism from public discourse and preserving good relations with the Soviet Union.[103] Polemically, Pătrășcanu theorized that all these steps were "democratic-bourgeois", and not socialist in their essence.[104]

The arguably most influential of Pătrășcanu's writings remains his analysis of the Romanian intelligentsia, part of Probleme de bază ale României.[105] Transcending Leninist rhetoric, the work postulates a characteristic inability of Romanian intellectuals in sacrificing petty politics for the common good, and argues that Romanian elites, while in subservience to the State, have traditionally been attracted to extremism.[106] On one instance in 1945, when theorizing about intellectual déclassés, he proposed their neutralization and systematic supervision".[107]

Personal life

Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu was married to Elena, born Herta Schwamen, who had a career as a stage designer (employed, with Lena Constante, by the Țăndărică Theater in Bucharest). Elena, who was Jewish, avoided the first wave of official anti-Semitic persecutions at the end of the 1930s (under the Octavian Goga government) by converting to the Romanian Orthodox Church (she was baptized by the socialist sympathiser Gala Galaction).[108]

Elena Pătrășcanu was also a party activist, and was instrumental in maintaining links between her husband and other Communist leaders during the early stages of World War II.[20] Implicated in the trial and forced to testify against Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, she was given eight years in prison.

The Pătrășcanus had no children.

In art

Titus Popovici's play Puterea și adevărul ("The Power and the Truth"), published in the early 1970s (staged by Liviu Ciulei and filmed, in 1971, by Manole Marcus), centers on the character Petrescu, largely based on Pătrășcanu, who is persecuted by the party secretary Pavel Stoian (a disguised reference to Gheorghiu-Dej), while living to see his hopes for a better future fulfilled by Mihai Duma (standing for Ceaușescu).[109] For a while after its publication, Puterea și adevărul was translated into several languages and used as official propaganda in cultural contacts with the outside world.[110]

In his 1993 film The Mirror (Începutul adevărului, also known as Oglinda), Sergiu Nicolaescu cast Șerban Ionescu as Pătrășcanu.

Published volumes

  • Un veac de frământări sociale, 1821-1907 (A Century of Social Unrest, 1821-1907)
  • Probleme de bază ale României (Fundamental Problems of Romania)
  • Sub trei dictaturi (Under Three Dictatorships)
  • Curente și tendințe în filozofia românească (Schools of Thought and Tendencies in Romanian Philosophy)

Notes

  1. ^ Mocsony Stârcea, in Caranfil, p.30. The Pătrășcanu branch of the family was also described as "of low-ranking Moldavian boyars" by historian Stelian Tănase, who also argued that Pătrășcanu had been confronted with criticism that he was "a salon communist" (Tănase, "Belu Zilber".I)
  2. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 236–238.
  3. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 238–239.
  4. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 239.
  5. ^ a b Cioroianu 2005, p. 240.
  6. ^ "Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, jurnalistul cu peste 10 pseudonime" [Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, the journalist with over 10 pseudonyms] (in Romanian). Info Cultural. 1 March 2021. Retrieved 18 December 2021.
  7. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 238.
  8. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 34; Tismăneanu, p.48
  9. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 34; Frunză, p.39
  10. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 37; Ioniță, p.45
  11. ^ Pătrășcanu, in Ioniță, p.45
  12. ^ Frunză, p.148-149; Tismăneanu, p.72
  13. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 39; Tismăneanu, p.72
  14. ^ Ornea, p.150
  15. ^ Petreu, "O generație apolitică, paricidă, autohtonistă, experiențialistă, antipașoptistă"; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  16. ^ Editor's note in Caranfil, p.30; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  17. ^ Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  18. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 234.
  19. ^ Chiva & Șchiop
  20. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k Betea, "Ambiția..."
  21. ^ Editor's note in Caranfil, p.29
  22. ^ a b Mocsony Stârcea, in Caranfil, p.30
  23. ^ a b Rădulescu
  24. ^ Cioroianu (2005), pp. 49–50, 62; Frunză, p.400-402; Rădulescu
  25. ^ Eremia, Radu; Ungureanu, Laurențiu (November 4, 2014). "Apostolii lui Stalin. Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, comunistul-intelectual care ar fi putut fi: "Îmi plac femeile, dar amanta mea numărul unu rămâne politica"" [Stalin's apostles. Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, the communist-intellectual who could have been: "I like women, but my number one mistress remains politics"]. Adevărul (in Romanian). Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  26. ^ Barbu, "Destinul colectiv...", p.188; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  27. ^ a b Betea, "Antisovietismul..."
  28. ^ Barbu, "Destinul colectiv...", p.188-190
  29. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 232.
  30. ^ Cioroianu (2005), pp. 226, 232–233; Frunză, p.227, 471
  31. ^ a b Cliff
  32. ^ The New York Times, in Cliff
  33. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 226–227.
  34. ^ Cioroianu (2005), pp. 92–93, 175, 177, 195, 222, 234–235, 262; Tismăneanu, p.114
  35. ^ Apostol, in Antoniu et al.
  36. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 177, 184–195.
  37. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 179.
  38. ^ Declaration of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, November 18, 1949, ASRI, Fond P, Dosar 40002, Vol. 1, p. 113; cited in Robert Levy, Ana Pauker: The Rise and Fall of a Jewish Communist, Berkeley and Los Angeles: 2001, p. 139, 315, n. 46
  39. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 241–244, 255–256, 261–262.
  40. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 241, 248–251, 254–255.
  41. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 252.
  42. ^ a b Pătrășcanu, in Betea, "Ambiția..."
  43. ^ a b Pokivailova, p.13
  44. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 225–226.
  45. ^ Pătrășcanu, June 1946, in Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.37
  46. ^ Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.38-39
  47. ^ Gheorghiu-Dej during a PCR Central Committee plenum, November 1946, in Frunză, p.362, in Tismăneanu, p.114
  48. ^ Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.37
  49. ^ Betea, "Antisovietismul..."; Cioroianu (2005), pp. 224, 246–247, 261
  50. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 247, 253–254.
  51. ^ Boia, p.275; Cioroianu (2005), pp. 261–262
  52. ^ Zilber, rendered in Tănase, "Belu Zilber".III; in Tismăneanu, p.75, 114
  53. ^ Frunză, p.359-360; Tismăneanu, p.114
  54. ^ Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.37; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  55. ^ Frunză, p.362
  56. ^ Frunză, p.360-361
  57. ^ Drăgoescu, p.23; Frunză, p.363
  58. ^ a b Tănase, "Belu Zilber".III
  59. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 201; Drăgoescu, p.23
  60. ^ a b Drăgoescu, p.23
  61. ^ Drăgoescu, p.24
  62. ^ Tismăneanu, p.106
  63. ^ Frunză, p.402
  64. ^ Pătrășcanu and his SSI handlers revealed this in subsequent interrogations or statements; cited in Levy, p. 145, 318, note 99.
  65. ^ Levy, Ana Pauker, p. 146.
  66. ^ Levy, Ana Pauker, p. 147-148.
  67. ^ Pătrășcanu, in Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.37
  68. ^ Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.36, 37; Drăgoescu, p.24
  69. ^ Betea, "Portret în gri...", p.39
  70. ^ a b c Betea, "Recunoștința..."
  71. ^ "Report on the Party Commission Established to Clarify the Situation of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, submitted to the Party Leadership on June 29, 1968," Executive Archive of the Central Committee of the R.C.P., pp. 43-44; cited in Levy, Ana Pauker, p. 149, note 133.
  72. ^ Levy, Ana Pauker, p. 149, 321, note 137.
  73. ^ Betea, "Recunoștința..."; Drăgoescu, p.24, 25; Golopenția
  74. ^ Levy, Ana Pauker, p. 150-151.
  75. ^ Drăgoescu, p.24-25; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".III
  76. ^ McDermott, Kevin; Stibbe, Matthew (2015). De-Stalinising Eastern Europe: The Rehabilitation of Stalin's Victims after 1953. Springer. ISBN 9781137368928 – via Google Books.
  77. ^ Cioroianu (2005), p. 398; Drăgoescu, p.25-26
  78. ^ Drăgoescu, p.25; Frunză, p.408-409
  79. ^ Betea, Lavinia (2018). Lucreţiu Pătrăşcanu : moartea unui lider comunist (Ediţia a IV-a, revizuită ed.). Bucureşti. pp. 218–219, 522. ISBN 978-606-44-0118-2.
  80. ^ Lazăr, Virgil (April 21, 2011). "Cum a murit, în realitate, Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu?" [How did Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu actually die?]. România Liberă (in Romanian). Retrieved February 5, 2021.
  81. ^ Pătrășcanu, in Drăgoescu, p.26
  82. ^ Frunză, p.401, 409; Golopenția; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  83. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 228.
  84. ^ Tănase, "Belu Zilber".I
  85. ^ Onișoru, Gheorghe (April 10, 2020). "Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, omul care a vrut să intre în istorie" [Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu, the man who wanted to go down in history]. Historia (in Romanian). Retrieved April 19, 2020.
  86. ^ Boia, p.256; Cioroianu (2005), pp. 233, 397–399
  87. ^ Analele Institutului de Studii Istorice și Social-Politice de pe lângă CC al PCR, in Müller, p.62
  88. ^ Betea, "Recunoștința..."; Drăgoescu, p.25; Golopenția
  89. ^ Drăgoescu, p.25
  90. ^ Drăgoescu, p.26
  91. ^ a b Cioroianu 2005, pp. 398–399.
  92. ^ Rendered in Cioroianu, p.399
  93. ^ Boia, p.256; Cioroianu (2005), p. 233; Müller, p.61
  94. ^ Betea, "Antisovietismul..."; Cioroianu (2005), pp. 223–224, 230–231; Tănase, "Belu Zilber".II
  95. ^ a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stahl
  96. ^ Barbu, Political Science in Romania
  97. ^ a b Pătrășcanu, in Stahl
  98. ^ Cernea; Stahl
  99. ^ Pătrășcanu, in Cernea
  100. ^ Cioroianu (2005), pp. 250–251; Stahl
  101. ^ Cioroianu (2005), pp. 251–253; Stahl
  102. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 249.
  103. ^ a b Cioroianu 2005, p. 255.
  104. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 255–256.
  105. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 56.
  106. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 256–259, 260.
  107. ^ Pătrășcanu, in Cioroianu, p.262
  108. ^ Antoniu et al.
  109. ^ Cioroianu 2005, pp. 229–230.
  110. ^ Cioroianu 2005, p. 229.

References

  • Dosarele Istoriei
    • 2/I, 1996:
      • Dragoș Drăgoescu, "Arma politică a reabilitărilor. Caruselul crimelor și liderii comuniști români" ("The Political Weapon of Rehabilitations. The Murder Carousel and Romanian Communist Leaders"), pp. 20–34
      • Florin Müller, "Cu cărțile pe masă. Politică și istoriografie: Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu" ("Cards on the Table. Politics and Historiography: Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu"), p. 61-63
    • 10/III, 1998:
      • Ghorghe I. Ioniță, "Tezele Moscovei, ordin și pentru marionetele de la București. Cominternul, PCdR și problema națională" ("Moscow's Theses, Orders for the Bucharest Puppets. The Comintern, PCdR and the National Issue"), p. 42-47
  • (in Romanian) Gabriela Antoniu, Claudiu Târziu, , in Jurnalul Național, March 8, 2004
  • Daniel Barbu,
    • "Destinul colectiv, servitutea involuntară, nefericirea totalitară: trei mituri ale comunismului românesc" interbelică la communism" ("Collective Destiny, Involuntary Servitude, Totalitarian Misery: Three Myths of Romanian Communism"), in Lucian Boia, ed., Miturile comunismului românesc ("The Myths of Romanian Communism"), Editura Nemira, Bucharest, 1998, p. 175-197
    • Political Science in Romania, Country Report 1, at the Knowledge Base Social Sciences in Eastern Europe
  • Lucian Boia, History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness, Central European University Press, 2001
  • Lavinia Betea,
    • (in Romanian) , in Magazin Istoric
    • (in Romanian) , in Jurnalul Național, November 1, 2005
    • "Portret în gri. Pătrășcanu – deputat de Arad" ("Portrait in Grey. Pătrășcanu – a Deputy for Arad"), in Magazin Istoric, June 1998
    • (in Romanian) , in Magazin Istoric
  • Tudor Caranfil, "Despre destin și istorie, cu Ionel Mocsony Stârcea, baron de Foen" ("On Destiny and History, with Ionel Mocsony Stârcea, baron de Foen", interview with Mocsony Stârcea), in Magazin Istoric, November 1995
  • (in Romanian) Emil Cernea,
  • (in Romanian) Ionuț Chiva, Adrian Șchiop, "Boierii comuniști" ("The Communist Boyars", interview with Dimitrie Calimachi, the son of Scarlat Callimachi), in Prezent, November 21, 2006
  • Cioroianu, Adrian (2005). Pe umerii lui Marx. O introducere în istoria comunismului românesc [On the Shoulders of Marx. An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism] (in Romanian). Bucharest: Editura Curtea Veche.
  • Tony Cliff, On the Class Nature of the "People’s Democracies", II: "Were There Victorious Proletarian Revolutions in Eastern Europe?", at the Marxists Internet Archive
  • (in Romanian) Victor Frunză, Istoria stalinismului în România ("The History of Stalinism in Romania"), Humanitas, Bucharest, 1990
  • (in Romanian) Sanda Golopenția, "Introducere la Ultima carte de Anton Golopenția (Anchetatorii)" ("Introduction to Anton Golopenția's Ultima carte (The Inquisitors)"), at Memoria.ro
  • Z. Ornea, Anii treizeci. Extrema dreaptă românească ("The Thirties: the Far Right in Romania"), Ed. Fundației Culturale Române, Bucharest, 1995
  • (in Romanian) Marta Petreu, , in Revista 22, Nr.676, February 2003
  • T. A. Pokilvailova, "Metode de desfășurare a alegerilor din România" ("Methods through Which the Romanian Elections Were Carried Out"), in Magazin Istoric, November 1995
  • (in Romanian) Mihai Rădulescu, , interview with Corneliu Coposu
  • (in Romanian) Henri H. Stahl,
  • Stelian Tănase, "Belu Zilber" (fragments of O istorie a comunismului românesc interbelic, "A History of Romanian Interwar Communism"), in Revista 22, August 2003: , ,
  • Vladimir Tismăneanu, Stalinism for All Seasons: A Political History of Romanian Communism, University of California Press, Berkeley, 2003, ISBN 0-520-23747-1

External links

lucrețiu, pătrășcanu, romanian, pronunciation, luˈkret, pətrəʃˈkanu, november, 1900, april, 1954, romanian, communist, politician, leading, member, communist, party, romania, also, noted, activities, lawyer, sociologist, economist, while, professor, university. Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu Romanian pronunciation luˈkret sju petreʃˈkanu November 4 1900 April 17 1954 was a Romanian communist politician and leading member of the Communist Party of Romania PCR also noted for his activities as a lawyer sociologist and economist For a while he was a professor at the University of Bucharest Pătrășcanu rose to a government position before the end of World War II and after having disagreed with Stalinist tenets on several occasions eventually came into conflict with the Romanian Communist government of Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej He became a political prisoner and was ultimately executed Fourteen years after Pătrășcanu s death Romania s new communist leader Nicolae Ceaușescu endorsed his rehabilitation as part of a change in policy Lucrețiu PătrășcanuMinister of Justice of RomaniaIn office 23 August 1944 23 February 1948Prime MinisterConstantin SănătescuNicolae RădescuPetru GrozaPreceded byIon C MarinescuSucceeded byAvram BunaciuPersonal detailsBorn 1900 11 04 4 November 1900Bacău Kingdom of RomaniaDied17 April 1954 1954 04 17 aged 53 Jilava Prison Ilfov County Romanian People s RepublicCause of deathExecution by shootingPolitical partyRomanian Communist PartySpouse s Elena Pătrășcanu nee SchwamernParent s Dimitrie D PătrășcanuLucreția PătrășcanuAlma materUniversity of BucharestLeipzig UniversityProfessionLawyer Contents 1 Early life 2 1930s 3 World War II imprisonment 4 1944 negotiations and fall of Foriș 5 August 23 and government position 6 Early conflicts with the Party 7 1946 elections 8 Marginalisation 9 Securitate imprisonment and interrogations 10 Trial and execution 11 Rehabilitation 12 Sociology 12 1 Overview 12 2 On feudalism and serfdom 12 3 On radicalism and reformism 12 4 On the 20th century 13 Personal life 14 In art 15 Published volumes 16 Notes 17 References 18 External linksEarly life EditPătrășcanu was born in Bacău to a leading political family as the son of Poporanist figure Dimitrie D Pătrășcanu Lucrețiu s mother Lucreția was a scion of the Stoika family of Transylvanian petty nobility 1 He became a Poporanist and later a socialist in his youth 2 joining the Socialist Party of Romania in 1919 3 and working as editor of its newspaper Socialismul 1921 4 Professionally he was educated at the University of Bucharest s Faculty of Law from which he graduated in 1922 and at Leipzig University earning his PhD in 1925 5 He had an intense journalistic activity Collaborator in numerous newspapers where he published his articles under various pseudonyms M Andreescu Bercu R Boldur Coca V Dragomir Fischer Ghiță Grigorescu Ion C Ion N Lascenco Mihalcea Miron Victor Mălin A Moldoveanu Andrei Moldoveanu L D Pătrășcanu Stătescu Titu Vrabie and with the initials A M and L D P 6 Increasingly radical after the success of the October Revolution 7 he was one of the original members of the PCR known as PCdR at the time in 1921 8 Pătrășcanu Elek Koblos and Ana and Marcel Pauker were the representatives of the group to the 4th Comintern Congress in Moscow November December 1922 9 Back in Romania Pătrășcanu was arrested and imprisoned at Jilava in 1924 the year when the party was outlawed he went on hunger strike until being relocated to a prison hospital 5 At the Kharkiv Congress of 1928 where he was present under the name Mironov 10 Pătrășcanu clashed with the Comintern overseer Bohumir Smeral as well as with many of his fellow party members over the issue of Bessarabia and Moldovenism which was to be passed into a resolution stating that Greater Romania was an imperialist entity Pătrășcanu argued Moldovans are not a nation apart and from a historical and geographical point of view Moldovans are the same Romanians as the Romanians in Moldavia on the right bank of the Prut River Thus I believe that the introduction of such a false point renders the resolution itself false 11 1930s Edit Eugen Rozvan Vasile Cașul Ștefan Dan Pătrășcanu and Imre Aladar in 1931 With Imre Aladar Eugen Rozvan and two others Pătrășcanu was elected to the Chamber of Deputies in May 1931 as a candidate for the Workers and Peasants Bloc an umbrella group masking the outlawed party 12 Later in the same year the 5th Party Congress held in Soviet exile at Gorikovo chose him among the new Central Committee members while Alexander Stefanski rose to the position of general secretary 13 In 1932 he was involved in polemics at the Criterion group where he and his collaborator Belu Zilber defended a Stalinist view of Vladimir Lenin in front of criticism from the right wing Mircea Vulcănescu and Mihail Polihroniade 14 as well as from the Austromarxist perspective of Henri H Stahl 15 Pătrășcanu again served as the PCdR s representative to the Comintern in 1933 and 1934 remaining in Moscow until 1935 16 Stelian Tănase argues that during this time he developed doubts about Stalinism itself 17 During the following years Pătrășcanu continued to prioritize opposition to fascism and remained active in the PCR In 1936 he was heading the defense team of PCR members who were facing the much publicized Craiova Trial but was himself denounced as a communist and consequently handed the position to Ion Gheorghe Maurer 18 World War II imprisonment EditPătrășcanu was imprisoned during World War II and after August 1940 spent time at the Targu Jiu internment camp with Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej and the prison faction of the Party the communists inside Romania virtually all imprisoned at various stages of the war as opposed to those who had taken refuge inside the Soviet Union Like his fellow activist Scarlat Callimachi he was set free by the National Legionary Government while the fascist Iron Guard which allied Romania with Nazi Germany was trying to preserve good relations with the Soviet Union 19 He subsequently followed orders from Teohari Georgescu to re create a defunct outlet of the party the cultural society Amicii URSS Friends of the USSR 20 In 1941 following the Legionary Rebellion he was again arrested by the regime of Conducător Ion Antonescu After a release from camp for health reasons in 1943 he was under house arrest in Poiana Țapului allowed to settle in Bucharest later in that year he remained under supervision until May 1944 21 1944 negotiations and fall of Foriș EditAccording to Ioan Mocsony Starcea marshal of King Michael I s court between 1942 and 1944 he met Pătrășcanu in April 1944 in order to mediate an agreement between the monarch and the Communists regarding a pro Allied move to overthrow Antonescu and withdraw Romania which was fighting the Soviets on the Eastern Front from the Axis 22 Pătrășcanu together with Emil Bodnăraș represented the Communist Party during the clandestine talks with the National Liberal and National Peasants parties aimed at overthrowing the Antonescu dictatorship Corneliu Coposu who later claimed had friendly contacts with Pătrășcanu at the time also claimed that the latter had been selected by the Soviets as representative of the Communists during negotiations in Cairo Nikolai Novikov the Soviet ambassador to Egypt had reportedly first mentioned Pătrășcanu s name to Barbu Știrbey for further contacts 23 It was also at this time that Gheorghiu Dej and Bodnăraș together with Constantin Pirvulescu and Iosif Rangheț toppled the general secretary Ștefan Foriș and assumed leadership of the party 24 Gheorghiu Dej had probably attracted Pătrășcanu s support for the planned move as early as 1943 20 According to Mocsony Starcea Pătrășcanu was responsible for a compromise between the Communist Party and institutions of the Romanian monarchy allegedly assuring the king that it was not his party s intent to proclaim a republic without a previous referendum on the matter 22 Coposu also claimed that through Pătrășcanu the Communist Party had entered negotiations with the other opposition groups and informed them of abandoning its previous theses of the future Romanian state 23 August 23 and government position EditThe collaboration led to the arrest of Ion Antonescu and Mihai Antonescu at the Royal Palace in Bucharest during the August 23 Coup 1944 Pătrășcanu together with Belu Zilber 25 authored the proclamation to the country which the king read on National Radio immediately after the coup 26 and confronting the new Premier Constantin Sănătescu imposed himself as a PCR representative on the delegation that signed Romania s armistice with the Soviets on September 12 1944 27 Present in Moscow he contacted Ana Pauker and Vasile Luca through their overseer Andrey Vyshinsky reestablishing communication between the two major sections of the PCR 27 Pătrășcanu joined the Central Committee in 1945 after having returned to Romania with the Red Army late in 1944 and was largely responsible for the success his party had in controlling Romania s legal framework for the following years 28 During Soviet occupation he served on the Romanian Politburo from 1946 to 1947 and held power in the new governments as Minister without Portfolio 1944 and Minister of Justice 1944 1948 29 Pătrășcanu who attempted to become general secretary early in 1944 before Gheorghiu Dej secured the position for himself citation needed was considered who leader of the party s Secretariat Communists perceived who as less willing to follow Stalin s directions After the ascension of the Petru Groza government Pătrășcanu was also one of the initiators of purges and persecutions being responsible for dismissing and arresting members of the civil service who were considered suspect for the creation of the Romanian People s Tribunals as well as the appointment of prosecutors promoting Avram Bunaciu Constanța Crăciun and Alexandra Sidorovici 30 Citing a statement by Pătrășcanu rendered by The New York Times British Trotskyist commentator Tony Cliff extended his critique of the people s democracies of the Eastern Bloc to the realm of justice systems and retribution for war crimes 31 According to the American newspaper Pătrășcanu had reassured media that industrialists businessmen and bankers will escape punishment as war criminals 32 Cliff also argued that the new course in justice had failed to alter what he saw as Romania s bureaucratic and militarist character 31 Pătrășcanu put pressure on King Michael to sign legislation that went against the letter of the 1923 Constitution which contributed to the latter s decision to initiate the royal strike a refusal to countersign documents issued by the Groza executive 33 Early conflicts with the Party Edit Pătrășcanu Teohari Georgescu Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej Lothar Rădăceanu and Ștefan Voitec at the August 23 1945 Parade in Palace Square Bucharest During the late 1940s he is thought to have begun expressing his opposition to strict Stalinist guidelines at the same time Pătrășcanu had become suspect to the rest of the party leadership for his intellectual approach to socialism 34 Gheorghe Apostol a collaborator of Gheorghiu Dej s later expressed a particular view on the matter of Pătrășcanu s relations with the rest of the party He was a reliable party intellectual But he was also a very arrogant man self important intolerant and unwilling to communicate with his party comrades And yet Gheorghiu Dej treasured him Between 46 48 Pătrășcanu changed quite a lot 35 Around February 1945 he began to fear the possibility that Emil Bodnăraș was planning his assassination and that he intended to blame it on political opponents of the Communist Party as a means to direct sympathy towards the latter group 20 He suspected that Bodnăraș had chosen to back Gheorghiu Dej allegedly fearing that Pătrășcanu was betraying the fragile alliance established before the fall of Ștefan Foriș 20 Consequently he attempted to block Bodnăraș s rise to power and denounced his reputedly corrupt activities as Secretary in the Interior Ministry to the other members of the leadership 20 Historiography is divided over the possibility of Pătrășcanu having initially allied himself with the PCR s second in command Ana Pauker in her post war confrontation with Gheorghiu Dej 36 It is apparent that Pătrășcanu was alarmed by Pauker s close cooperation with Soviet overseers and especially by her tight connection with Dmitry Manuilsky 37 it was also contended that Pauker was intrigued by Pătrășcanu s self promotion in front of Soviet overseers during late 1944 20 Under arrest however Pătrășcanu asserted that he was closest to Pauker and Teohari Georgescu among the Romanian party leaders 38 Pătrășcanu Teohari Georgescu and Gheorghe Gheorghiu Dej watching a May Day parade in Bucharest 1946 Although overall Pătrășcanu was argued to have been much less revolutionary minded than various other PCR ideologues 39 his original perspective on Marxism remained strongly connected with party doctrine in its most essential points 40 including his intense advocacy of collectivization using statistics to point out the existence of a class of chiaburi the Romanian equivalent of the Soviet kulaks 41 He showed himself surprised when informed that the Soviet Union had planned a rapid communization of the country and dismissed Vasile Luca and Pauker s vocal support for the latter policy 20 Instead he argued in favor of making a distinction inside the bourgeoisie 42 and opening the Communist Party to collaboration with the National Liberal Party 20 Based on this he denounced Pauker s agreement with Gheorghe Tătărescu s National Liberal dissidence the National Liberal Party Tătărescu which he called a gang of con artists blackmailers and well known bribers 42 A serious break with the party line occurred in early 1946 when Pătrășcanu decided to take initiative and intervened in the standoff between King Michael I and the Petru Groza executive an episode colloquially known as greva regală the royal strike with the help of Lena Constante he approached the anti communist figures Victor Rădulescu Pogoneanu and Grigore Niculescu Buzești calling on them to convince the monarch to resume communications with his government 20 1946 elections EditDuring the campaign preceding the rigged elections of 1946 he was actively involved in the PCR s electoral campaign in Transylvania and after drought and famine surfaced in several other areas of Romania he attempted to persuade the peasants of Arad County to sell their wheat harvest to the government to be used as aid 43 Received with suspicion he later reported that he had eventually been able to carry out the task 43 Responding to Hungarian Romanian clashes Pătrășcanu gave a speech in the city of Cluj one in which he attempted to identify communism and patriotism 44 It stated In the name of the government and of the PCR I raise my voice against border changes in connection with the disputed status of newly recovered Northern Transylvania Democratic Romania ensures equal rights to coinhabiting nationalities but the Magyar population needs to understand that its belonging to the Romanian state is definitive Nobody has the right to debate our borders 45 He ran for the position of deputy in Arad County and won through various electoral frauds in Arad s case forty inspectors nominated by the government had sole control over counting and recording the results 46 Pătrășcanu soon received harsh criticism from Gheorghiu Dej who branded the views expressed as chauvinism and revisionism 47 In parallel the National Peasants Party as the main force opposing the PCR published praises of Pătrășcanu in its paper Dreptatea until Pătrășcanu met with the editor Nicolae Carandino and explained that such articles were harming his image inside the Communist Party 48 Nevertheless Pătrășcanu s writings of the time show that in contrast with his 1928 point of view he had largely accommodated Leninist principles regarding the national issue and Bessarabian topics 49 although he used more neutral terms than the ones present in official propaganda 50 and was known to have deplored the unwillingness of the PCR to reduce and refine its internationalist policies 51 Marginalisation EditIn 1946 1947 Pătrășcanu was nevertheless a member of the Tătărescu headed Romanian delegation to the Paris Peace Conference and in fact one of the signatories of the Peace Treaty with Romania According to Belu Zilber during this time he read Arthur Koestler s Darkness at Noon 52 a glimpse into forced confessions alluding to the 1936 1937 Moscow Trials the book was banned throughout the Eastern Bloc The attitudes he expressed in Paris were considered nationalist by his Soviet overseers 53 and he himself complained to Gheorghiu Dej about the party s suspicion surrounding his diplomatic activities 54 He was progressively marginalized inside the Party his texts became subject to censorship and on public occasions his name was mentioned after those of less significant politicians 55 The Communist press virtually ceased referring to Pătrășcanu as comrade and used instead the more distant formula Professor Pătrășcanu at the same time as Gheorghiu Dej s speeches on combating internal currents of the Party 56 The VIth Party Congress in February 1948 did not confirm his Central Committee membership and in the months following the event he was removed from government office 57 Belu Zilber claimed that having himself been subject to suspicion and marginalisation he had attempted to warn Pătrășcanu of the change in climate and had asked him to consider fleeing the Eastern Bloc only to be stiffly rebuffed 58 Zilber was eventually arrested in February 1948 on suspicion that he had been a Siguranța Statului agent infiltrating the party 58 Securitate imprisonment and interrogations EditOn April 28 1948 Pătrășcanu was arrested and came under the investigation of a party committee comprising the high ranking Communists Teohari Georgescu Alexandru Drăghici and Iosif Rangheț interrogations were occasionally attended by Gheorghiu Dej 59 His file indicates that the secret police which was soon to become the Securitate had been keeping him under surveillance from as early as the summer of 1946 60 In the fall of 1949 Gheorghiu Dej apparently contradicting the committee s conclusions ordered Pătrășcanu s transfer into the custody of the Secret Service of the Council of Ministers SSI under the provisional charge that Pătrășcanu had not reported various political crimes 61 A report on Titoism and collaboration with the maverick Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia was presented to the Cominform it placed Pătrășcanu the Hungarian Republic s Laszlo Rajk and Bulgaria s Traicho Kostov in the same camp as imperialist agents see Tito Stalin split Informbiro 62 The investigation also implicated Remus Koffler who had been imprisoned in 1944 during the confrontation between Gheorghiu Dej and Ștefan Foriș 63 The day after the SSI began its inquiry Pătrășcanu attempted suicide by slitting his veins with a smuggled razor blade upon his recovery he tried to take his life a second time by swallowing an overdose of sleeping pills 64 Immediately after his second suicide attempt the Pătrășcanu inquiry was transferred to the Interior Ministry where it was suspended for a six month period to enable officers to determine a factual basis in the case 65 When the inquiry resumed in February 1951 Interior Minister Teohari Georgescu ordered that the detainees in the case were not to be physically coerced in stark contrast to the expressed instructions of the ministry s chief Soviet adviser Aleksandr Sakharovsky to do everything necessary to determine the guilt of the accused In the summer of 1951 Teohari Georgescu together with his deputies Gheorghe Pintilie and Mișu Dulgheru reached the conclusion that there was no basis to continue Pătrășcanu s prosecution and did so while the Soviet advisers were away on their summer vacation When the advisers returned they angrily vetoed any closing of the Pătrășcanu inquiry 66 It was in 1951 that Pătrășcanu responded to the charges voiced by Gheorghiu Dej after the Cluj incident indicating that he had attempted to answer to the Hungarian revisionist campaign as well as to aid his party in competing with the appeal of the National Peasants Party among Romanians in Transylvania to take the weapon that was Transylvania away from Maniu supporters hands 67 He also criticized his own advocacy of a PCR alliance with the National Liberal Party 20 He was accused of having been financed by bourgeois figures during the electoral campaign and even of having been bought by agents of the United States 68 or of planning together with Ioan Mocsony Starcea and Titoist agents an imperialist insurrection in Săvarșin 69 The latter allegation also surfaced in the parallel investigations of Koffler and Emil Calmanovici 70 Serious questions remain on the positions of the various Romanian Communist leaders on the Pătrășcanu case The matter has not been satisfactorily resolved in the Romanian archives for the simple reason that all records and transcripts of Politburo and Secretariat discussions on Pătrășcanu were summarily destroyed on Gheorghiu Dej s orders 71 In any case no piece of evidence or confession was obtained by the inquiry until after May 1952 after the purge of Ana Pauker and Teohari Georgescu who were accused by the Soviet adviser Sakharovskii of having sabotaged and postponed investigations in the Pătrășcanu case 72 The Central Committee plenum that purged them assigned the Pătrășcanu investigation to a team of Securitate officials and their Soviet advisors directly supervised by Alexandru Drăghici Alexandru Nicolschi and Vladimir Mazuru 73 Under this new team torture and beating began to be employed in interrogations in the Pătrășcanu case for the first time in the fall of 1952 74 In time authorities also alleged that before 1944 Pătrășcanu like Zilber had acted as an agent of Siguranța Statului 75 Trial and execution EditPătrășcanu was kept in detention until 1954 when he was executed on 17 April 76 with Koffler in Jilava near Bucharest after a show trial overseen by Iosif Chișinevschi 77 It is possible that he was tortured throughout the questioning conducted on direct orders from the Securitate s Alexandru Drăghici and there have been rumours that he had one leg amputated before his trial 78 Researcher Lavinia Betea notes however that when his and Koffler s body where exhumed in 1968 both their skeletons were complete Moreover she concludes that unlike the case of other defendants physical violence was never used against Pătrășcanu or his wife 79 The execution took place in the courtyard of Jilava Prison Ion Mihai Pacepa claimed in his book Cartea neagră a Securității that Pătrășcanu was shot in the back of the head by a Securitate colonel 80 In preparation for the procedures the Securitate took direct inspiration from the Slansky trials in Communist Czechoslovakia where a team of Romanian officers had been sent to take notes and possibly from the Soviet Trial of the Twenty One which was allegedly used as template for Calmanovici s fabricated confession 70 Pătrășcanu refused to be represented by a lawyer and even to organize his own defense Aside from some outbursts against the prosecutors he stated I have nothing to say except that I spit on the charges brought against me 81 The actions taken against Pătrășcanu and others signaled the start of a wave of arrests and prison sentences including that of his wife as well as those of Harry Brauner Lena Constante Petre Pandrea who was Pătrășcanu s brother in law Herant Torosian Mocsony Starcea Calmanovici Victoria Sarbu who had been Ștefan Foriș s lover and Alexandru Ștefănescu 82 In preparation for the trial the Securitate organized interrogations of political detainees or suspects Gheorghe Tătărescu who testified against Pătrășcanu and was the target of a sharp rebuke from the latter 83 Belu Zilber the first of the group to give in to Securitate pressures and confess to the charges was verbally attacked by Pătrășcanu inside the courthouse Pătrășcanu notably accused him of having invented the entire conspiracy account 84 Records of their various interrogations show that both he and Calmanovici identified Emil Bodnăraș as the main instigator of their downfall 70 Reportedly Zilber had the following opinion of Pătrășcanu He was anti Stalinist and anti Russian but for the sake of power he would sign on any Stalinist ineptitude and wickedness I think his only purpose in life more than socialism was to enter history 85 Rehabilitation EditHe was posthumously rehabilitated in April 1968 by Nicolae Ceaușescu in the latter s attempt to discredit his predecessors and establish his own legitimacy 86 The main target of this campaign as indicated by a Central Committee resolution was Drăghici the party leadership has uncovered the anti party line which Alexandru Drăghici encouraged by servile uncultured and decaying elements has introduced to the Securitate bodies activities attempting to remove them from party control and to erect them into supreme bodies standing above party and state leadership thus causing serious harm to activity in various domains including that of scientific research 87 A party committee which included Ion Popescu Puțuri 60 investigated the matter of his arrest and interrogation concluding that evidence against Pătrășcanu was fabricated that he had been systematically beaten and otherwise ill treated and that a confession had been prepared for him to sign 88 This was coupled with various irregularities in procedures such as the court having been given only 24 hours to assess evidence from years of investigation and the death penalty having been decided by the party leadership before being imposed on the panel of judges 89 Evidence was also presented that some of the false confessions were designed as political weapons in internal party struggles implicating names of politicians who were not facing trial at the time 90 At the Party Plenum in late April 1968 Ceaușescu used Pătrășcanu s case and other ones to single out the negative influence of Drăghici and Iosif Chișinevschi while also placing suspicion on Emil Bodnăraș and Gheorghe Apostol who had approved of Pătrășcanu s purge 91 All of them were required to express self criticism 91 while Gheorghiu Dej was condemned for having initiated and overseen the measures 92 Ceaușescu profited on the enduring perception of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu s activities as patriotic and verging on dissidence while shadowing his fundamental role in the creation of the new penal system in Romania In fact although he was frequently quoted and displayed by the regime Pătrășcanu s life was usually described in brief and vague sentences 93 In popular discourse Pătrășcanu was also largely identified with positive causes and remained among the most popular Communist figures after the Romanian Revolution of 1989 toppled the regime 94 Streets in Sector 3 of Bucharest and in Bacău were named after him Sociology EditOverview Edit In his most important volumes most of which attracted public attention only after 1944 95 Pătrășcanu combined his commitment to Marxism Leninism with his sociological training producing an original outlook on social evolution focusing on major trends in Romanian society from the time of the Danubian Principalities to his day 95 Aside from its support for communist tenets his work shared many characteristics with the prominent currents of the Romanian sociological school notably the attention paid to prevailing social contrasts in a peasant dominated environment 96 and made occasional use of material provided by Dimitrie Gusti s comprehensive surveys 95 On feudalism and serfdom Edit According to Pătrășcanu Moldavia and Wallachia had forsaken feudalism by the mid 18th century maintaining instead a form of serfdom which had not been affected by the reforms of Hospodar Constantine Mavrocordatos 95 He argued that whereas feudalism was supported by metayage legislation passed by Mavrocordatos had endorsed and prolonged corvees a system consecrated in the 1830s by the new Organic Statute 95 In his view capitalism had manifested itself mainly as a reactionary force inside Romanian economy during the time of Phanariote rules Thus despite characteristic underdevelopment which he also noted the local economy had not contrasted with the stages postulated by Marxian economics 95 Pătrășcanu contended that the first relevant social conflict had occurred in 1821 at the time of Tudor Vladimirescu s Wallachian uprising He rejected the notion that despite Vladimirescu s statements to the contrary the rebellion had a peasant character and argued instead that it was evidence of low ranking boyars and merchants the embryo of a class that was to become the bourgeoisie 97 attempting to emancipate themselves from Ottoman pressures 95 In his view its nationalist character see Rise of nationalism under the Ottoman Empire had been manipulated by high ranking boyars as a measure to dissuade adverse reactions to privileges 95 On radicalism and reformism Edit The Wallachian Revolution of 1848 the most successful of similar revolts at the time was according to Pătrășcanu a mature reaction of bourgeois circles against boyar supremacy 95 it only sought to replace a privileged minority with another 97 but was generally not opposed to preserving an estate based economy 95 He similarly rejected Junimea s traditional criticism of post 1848 realities indicating that in its theory of forms without substance the group had failed to note that as a means to preserve several conservative tenets Westernization in Romania had willingly and not accidentally adopted an incomplete form 98 In analyzing the history of liberalism and radicalism in Romania he concluded that many of the most extreme social reformists had rallied in opposition to land reform he saw this phenomenon as having made possible the toppling of Romania s Domnitor Alexandru Ioan Cuza whom he saw as a supporter of industrialization 95 He extended this criticism to socialist groups other than his own arguing that the prevalent reformism was the cult of legalism 99 These views placed Pătrășcanu in opposition to other left wing authors in Romania namely the influential Poporanists most of whom had emphasized various contradictions between the Marxian model and local realities using Junimea s theory as a fundament aside from Pătrășcanu s own father these included his contemporary Virgil Madgearu and to a certain degree the Marxist Constantin Dobrogeanu Gherea 95 In parallel Pătrășcanu s theories were in sharp contrast with those held by advocates of economic liberalism and especially with Ștefan Zeletin s 100 On the 20th century Edit As part of his reflection on post 1900 realities Pătrășcanu contended that relatively delayed in comparison to economies of the Western world Romania had become subject to primitive accumulation of capital where the role of colonialism was taken by exploitation of the peasantry 95 Like Madgearu he appealed to the works of Rudolf Hilferding but used them as a basis to argue that foreign capital was being accumulated inside Romania and only transferred further through a limited number of industries 95 The Marxist historian Henri H Stahl has challenged this particular thesis calling it highly questionable 95 While endorsing some aspects of Dobrogeanu Gherea s theories regarding the ways in which serfdom was allegedly prolonged in a discreet form even after the 20th century Pătrășcanu challenged his refusal to investigate the effects of capitalism in rural areas 95 According to Pătrășcanu the establishment of estate leaseholders which he viewed as the cause for the 1907 revolt and other more minor peasant rebellions was not a sign of prolonged feudalism but one of capitalist penetration into agriculture 101 Contradicting the Social Democratic ideologists Lothar Rădăceanu and Șerban Voinea whom he accused of having lost contact with the working class Pătrășcanu theorized that the Romanian petite bourgeoisie was shrinking under pressure from successful capitalists while rejecting the notion that civil servants belonged to the middle class 102 Arguing in favor of a Romanian communist society during the late 1940s Pătrășcanu indicated a series of essential steps to this goal after discarding all legislation passed by the Ion Antonescu regime and purging the administrative apparatus a political amnesty was to be declared all properties upwards of 50 hectares were to be confiscated the National Bank passed into state property while trade unions came under government supervision and a new labour code was enforced and civil liberties were enhanced 103 Ultimately a new people s democratic government was to be imposed removing all forms of antisemitism and chauvinism from public discourse and preserving good relations with the Soviet Union 103 Polemically Pătrășcanu theorized that all these steps were democratic bourgeois and not socialist in their essence 104 The arguably most influential of Pătrășcanu s writings remains his analysis of the Romanian intelligentsia part of Probleme de bază ale Romaniei 105 Transcending Leninist rhetoric the work postulates a characteristic inability of Romanian intellectuals in sacrificing petty politics for the common good and argues that Romanian elites while in subservience to the State have traditionally been attracted to extremism 106 On one instance in 1945 when theorizing about intellectual declasses he proposed their neutralization and systematic supervision 107 Personal life EditLucrețiu Pătrășcanu was married to Elena born Herta Schwamen who had a career as a stage designer employed with Lena Constante by the Țăndărică Theater in Bucharest Elena who was Jewish avoided the first wave of official anti Semitic persecutions at the end of the 1930s under the Octavian Goga government by converting to the Romanian Orthodox Church she was baptized by the socialist sympathiser Gala Galaction 108 Elena Pătrășcanu was also a party activist and was instrumental in maintaining links between her husband and other Communist leaders during the early stages of World War II 20 Implicated in the trial and forced to testify against Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu she was given eight years in prison The Pătrășcanus had no children In art EditTitus Popovici s play Puterea și adevărul The Power and the Truth published in the early 1970s staged by Liviu Ciulei and filmed in 1971 by Manole Marcus centers on the character Petrescu largely based on Pătrășcanu who is persecuted by the party secretary Pavel Stoian a disguised reference to Gheorghiu Dej while living to see his hopes for a better future fulfilled by Mihai Duma standing for Ceaușescu 109 For a while after its publication Puterea și adevărul was translated into several languages and used as official propaganda in cultural contacts with the outside world 110 In his 1993 film The Mirror Inceputul adevărului also known as Oglinda Sergiu Nicolaescu cast Șerban Ionescu as Pătrășcanu Published volumes EditUn veac de frămantări sociale 1821 1907 A Century of Social Unrest 1821 1907 Probleme de bază ale Romaniei Fundamental Problems of Romania Sub trei dictaturi Under Three Dictatorships Curente și tendințe in filozofia romanească Schools of Thought and Tendencies in Romanian Philosophy Notes Edit Mocsony Starcea in Caranfil p 30 The Pătrășcanu branch of the family was also described as of low ranking Moldavian boyars by historian Stelian Tănase who also argued that Pătrășcanu had been confronted with criticism that he was a salon communist Tănase Belu Zilber I Cioroianu 2005 pp 236 238 Cioroianu 2005 pp 238 239 Cioroianu 2005 p 239 a b Cioroianu 2005 p 240 Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu jurnalistul cu peste 10 pseudonime Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu the journalist with over 10 pseudonyms in Romanian Info Cultural 1 March 2021 Retrieved 18 December 2021 Cioroianu 2005 p 238 Cioroianu 2005 p 34 Tismăneanu p 48 Cioroianu 2005 p 34 Frunză p 39 Cioroianu 2005 p 37 Ioniță p 45 Pătrășcanu in Ioniță p 45 Frunză p 148 149 Tismăneanu p 72 Cioroianu 2005 p 39 Tismăneanu p 72 Ornea p 150 Petreu O generație apolitică paricidă autohtonistă experiențialistă antipașoptistă Tănase Belu Zilber II Editor s note in Caranfil p 30 Tănase Belu Zilber II Tănase Belu Zilber II Cioroianu 2005 p 234 Chiva amp Șchiop a b c d e f g h i j k Betea Ambiția Editor s note in Caranfil p 29 a b Mocsony Starcea in Caranfil p 30 a b Rădulescu Cioroianu 2005 pp 49 50 62 Frunză p 400 402 Rădulescu Eremia Radu Ungureanu Laurențiu November 4 2014 Apostolii lui Stalin Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu comunistul intelectual care ar fi putut fi Imi plac femeile dar amanta mea numărul unu rămane politica Stalin s apostles Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu the communist intellectual who could have been I like women but my number one mistress remains politics Adevărul in Romanian Retrieved February 5 2021 Barbu Destinul colectiv p 188 Tănase Belu Zilber II a b Betea Antisovietismul Barbu Destinul colectiv p 188 190 Cioroianu 2005 p 232 Cioroianu 2005 pp 226 232 233 Frunză p 227 471 a b Cliff The New York Times in Cliff Cioroianu 2005 pp 226 227 Cioroianu 2005 pp 92 93 175 177 195 222 234 235 262 Tismăneanu p 114 Apostol in Antoniu et al Cioroianu 2005 pp 177 184 195 Cioroianu 2005 p 179 Declaration of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu November 18 1949 ASRI Fond P Dosar 40002 Vol 1 p 113 cited in Robert Levy Ana Pauker The Rise and Fall of a Jewish Communist Berkeley and Los Angeles 2001 p 139 315 n 46 Cioroianu 2005 pp 241 244 255 256 261 262 Cioroianu 2005 pp 241 248 251 254 255 Cioroianu 2005 p 252 a b Pătrășcanu in Betea Ambiția a b Pokivailova p 13 Cioroianu 2005 pp 225 226 Pătrășcanu June 1946 in Betea Portret in gri p 37 Betea Portret in gri p 38 39 Gheorghiu Dej during a PCR Central Committee plenum November 1946 in Frunză p 362 in Tismăneanu p 114 Betea Portret in gri p 37 Betea Antisovietismul Cioroianu 2005 pp 224 246 247 261 Cioroianu 2005 pp 247 253 254 Boia p 275 Cioroianu 2005 pp 261 262 Zilber rendered in Tănase Belu Zilber III in Tismăneanu p 75 114 Frunză p 359 360 Tismăneanu p 114 Betea Portret in gri p 37 Tănase Belu Zilber II Frunză p 362 Frunză p 360 361 Drăgoescu p 23 Frunză p 363 a b Tănase Belu Zilber III Cioroianu 2005 p 201 Drăgoescu p 23 a b Drăgoescu p 23 Drăgoescu p 24 Tismăneanu p 106 Frunză p 402 Pătrășcanu and his SSI handlers revealed this in subsequent interrogations or statements cited in Levy p 145 318 note 99 Levy Ana Pauker p 146 Levy Ana Pauker p 147 148 Pătrășcanu in Betea Portret in gri p 37 Betea Portret in gri p 36 37 Drăgoescu p 24 Betea Portret in gri p 39 a b c Betea Recunoștința Report on the Party Commission Established to Clarify the Situation of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu submitted to the Party Leadership on June 29 1968 Executive Archive of the Central Committee of the R C P pp 43 44 cited in Levy Ana Pauker p 149 note 133 Levy Ana Pauker p 149 321 note 137 Betea Recunoștința Drăgoescu p 24 25 Golopenția Levy Ana Pauker p 150 151 Drăgoescu p 24 25 Tănase Belu Zilber III McDermott Kevin Stibbe Matthew 2015 De Stalinising Eastern Europe The Rehabilitation of Stalin s Victims after 1953 Springer ISBN 9781137368928 via Google Books Cioroianu 2005 p 398 Drăgoescu p 25 26 Drăgoescu p 25 Frunză p 408 409 Betea Lavinia 2018 Lucreţiu Pătrăscanu moartea unui lider comunist Ediţia a IV a revizuită ed Bucuresti pp 218 219 522 ISBN 978 606 44 0118 2 Lazăr Virgil April 21 2011 Cum a murit in realitate Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu How did Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu actually die Romania Liberă in Romanian Retrieved February 5 2021 Pătrășcanu in Drăgoescu p 26 Frunză p 401 409 Golopenția Tănase Belu Zilber II Cioroianu 2005 p 228 Tănase Belu Zilber I Onișoru Gheorghe April 10 2020 Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu omul care a vrut să intre in istorie Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu the man who wanted to go down in history Historia in Romanian Retrieved April 19 2020 Boia p 256 Cioroianu 2005 pp 233 397 399 Analele Institutului de Studii Istorice și Social Politice de pe langă CC al PCR in Muller p 62 Betea Recunoștința Drăgoescu p 25 Golopenția Drăgoescu p 25 Drăgoescu p 26 a b Cioroianu 2005 pp 398 399 Rendered in Cioroianu p 399 Boia p 256 Cioroianu 2005 p 233 Muller p 61 Betea Antisovietismul Cioroianu 2005 pp 223 224 230 231 Tănase Belu Zilber II a b c d e f g h i j k l m n o p Stahl Barbu Political Science in Romania a b Pătrășcanu in Stahl Cernea Stahl Pătrășcanu in Cernea Cioroianu 2005 pp 250 251 Stahl Cioroianu 2005 pp 251 253 Stahl Cioroianu 2005 p 249 a b Cioroianu 2005 p 255 Cioroianu 2005 pp 255 256 Cioroianu 2005 p 56 Cioroianu 2005 pp 256 259 260 Pătrășcanu in Cioroianu p 262 Antoniu et al Cioroianu 2005 pp 229 230 Cioroianu 2005 p 229 References EditDosarele Istoriei 2 I 1996 Dragoș Drăgoescu Arma politică a reabilitărilor Caruselul crimelor și liderii comuniști romani The Political Weapon of Rehabilitations The Murder Carousel and Romanian Communist Leaders pp 20 34 Florin Muller Cu cărțile pe masă Politică și istoriografie Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu Cards on the Table Politics and Historiography Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu p 61 63 10 III 1998 Ghorghe I Ioniță Tezele Moscovei ordin și pentru marionetele de la București Cominternul PCdR și problema națională Moscow s Theses Orders for the Bucharest Puppets The Comintern PCdR and the National Issue p 42 47 in Romanian Gabriela Antoniu Claudiu Tarziu Pătrășcanu a primit un glonț in ceafă Pătrășcanu Received a Bullet in the Back of the Neck in Jurnalul Național March 8 2004 Daniel Barbu Destinul colectiv servitutea involuntară nefericirea totalitară trei mituri ale comunismului romanesc interbelică la communism Collective Destiny Involuntary Servitude Totalitarian Misery Three Myths of Romanian Communism in Lucian Boia ed Miturile comunismului romanesc The Myths of Romanian Communism Editura Nemira Bucharest 1998 p 175 197 Political Science in Romania Country Report 1 at the Knowledge Base Social Sciences in Eastern Europe Lucian Boia History and Myth in Romanian Consciousness Central European University Press 2001 Lavinia Betea in Romanian Ambiția de a intra in istorie The Ambition of Entering History in Magazin Istoric in Romanian Antisovietismul lui Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu s Anti Sovietism in Jurnalul Național November 1 2005 Portret in gri Pătrășcanu deputat de Arad Portrait in Grey Pătrășcanu a Deputy for Arad in Magazin Istoric June 1998 in Romanian Recunoștința Partidului față de cei care l au subvenționat The Party s Recognition towards Those Who Had Financed It in Magazin Istoric Tudor Caranfil Despre destin și istorie cu Ionel Mocsony Starcea baron de Foen On Destiny and History with Ionel Mocsony Starcea baron de Foen interview with Mocsony Starcea in Magazin Istoric November 1995 in Romanian Emil Cernea Criza dreptului in Romania The Crisis of Law in Romania Cap II Revendicarea unei noi repartiții a proprietății funciare The Call for a New Repartition of Land Ownership in Romanian Ionuț Chiva Adrian Șchiop Boierii comuniști The Communist Boyars interview with Dimitrie Calimachi the son of Scarlat Callimachi in Prezent November 21 2006 Cioroianu Adrian 2005 Pe umerii lui Marx O introducere in istoria comunismului romanesc On the Shoulders of Marx An Incursion into the History of Romanian Communism in Romanian Bucharest Editura Curtea Veche Tony Cliff On the Class Nature of the People s Democracies II Were There Victorious Proletarian Revolutions in Eastern Europe at the Marxists Internet Archive in Romanian Victor Frunză Istoria stalinismului in Romania The History of Stalinism in Romania Humanitas Bucharest 1990 in Romanian Sanda Golopenția Introducere la Ultima carte de Anton Golopenția Anchetatorii Introduction to Anton Golopenția s Ultima carte The Inquisitors at Memoria ro Z Ornea Anii treizeci Extrema dreaptă romanească The Thirties the Far Right in Romania Ed Fundației Culturale Romane Bucharest 1995 in Romanian Marta Petreu Generația 27 intre Holocaust și Gulag The 27 Generation between the Holocaust and the Gulag Part I in Revista 22 Nr 676 February 2003 T A Pokilvailova Metode de desfășurare a alegerilor din Romania Methods through Which the Romanian Elections Were Carried Out in Magazin Istoric November 1995 in Romanian Mihai Rădulescu Tragedia lui Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu s Tragedy interview with Corneliu Coposu in Romanian Henri H Stahl Ganditori și curente de istorie socială romanească Thinkers and Trends in Romanian Social History Chapter X Doctrina comunistă a lui Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu 1901 1954 The Communist Doctrine of Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu 1901 1954 Stelian Tănase Belu Zilber fragments of O istorie a comunismului romanesc interbelic A History of Romanian Interwar Communism in Revista 22 August 2003 Part I Nr 700 Part II Nr 701 Part III Nr 702 Vladimir Tismăneanu Stalinism for All Seasons A Political History of Romanian Communism University of California Press Berkeley 2003 ISBN 0 520 23747 1External links EditAnneli Maier The Power And The Truth A Political Play by Titus Popovici 1973 at the Blinken Open Society Archives Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Lucrețiu Pătrășcanu amp oldid 1133223432, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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